Evan Smoak, the Nowhere Man, crashes out of retirement to battle a violent threat even less human than he is.
Some agents are trained assassins. Evan is better described as engineered by Jack Johns, the Mystery Man who spirited him off from the Pride House Group Home when he was 12, honed the skills that made him a superlative killing machine, neglected less desirable aspects of his personality (like the ability to make small talk or show empathy), and turned him loose on a world in need of a superavenger. Now that he’s finally hung up his blood-soaked laurels, Evan just wants to be left alone, but that’s not on the agenda of Veronica LeGrande, the attractive 62-year-old who suddenly reveals herself as his mother so that she can beg him to protect Andrew Duran, a fellow alumnus of Pride House whom he hasn’t seen for many years. It’s a big ask, partly because Andre, as Evan once knew him, doesn’t want to be protected and partly because the enemies Andre was exposed to in his unlikely role as the midnight guard on an impound lot are seriously mean. Shortly after Andre accepted the promise of $1,000 from brother-and-sister killers Declan and Queenie Gentner to tell them when Jake Hargreave picked up the Bronco he crashed and abandoned, Hargreave returned, Andre made the call, and Hargreave’s throat was cut in the lot by a tiny, murderous drone. The man behind Mimeticom, drone king Brendan Molleken, has clearly studied all the villains in the James Bond movies, and there’s no limit on the possible carnage when Evan meets Molleken, the Gentners, or any of those drones.
Exhilarating pabulum for action fans weary of heroes who bother to maintain social lives.